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Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia

BACKGROUND: The human Adenovirus (HAdV) is a common agent of acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Its clinical impact in immunocompetent children and in the context of coinfections remains unclear in Tunisia. MATERIAL AND METHODS: HAdV‐ARIs were studied in hospitalized patients from birth to the age...

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Autores principales: Brini, Ines, Guerrero, Aida, Ezzine, Issaad‐Kawther, Orth‐Höller, Dorothea, Hetzer, Benjamin, Würzner, Reinhard, Hazgui, Olfa, Handous, Imene, Nouri‐Merchaoui, Sonia, Bouguila, Jihene, Mahdhaoui, Nabiha, Boughamoura, Lamia, Malekshahi, Zahra, von‐Laer, Dorothee, Hannachi, Naila, Boukadida, Jalel, Stoiber, Heribert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7689715/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.26375
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author Brini, Ines
Guerrero, Aida
Ezzine, Issaad‐Kawther
Orth‐Höller, Dorothea
Hetzer, Benjamin
Würzner, Reinhard
Hazgui, Olfa
Handous, Imene
Nouri‐Merchaoui, Sonia
Bouguila, Jihene
Mahdhaoui, Nabiha
Boughamoura, Lamia
Malekshahi, Zahra
von‐Laer, Dorothee
Hannachi, Naila
Boukadida, Jalel
Stoiber, Heribert
author_facet Brini, Ines
Guerrero, Aida
Ezzine, Issaad‐Kawther
Orth‐Höller, Dorothea
Hetzer, Benjamin
Würzner, Reinhard
Hazgui, Olfa
Handous, Imene
Nouri‐Merchaoui, Sonia
Bouguila, Jihene
Mahdhaoui, Nabiha
Boughamoura, Lamia
Malekshahi, Zahra
von‐Laer, Dorothee
Hannachi, Naila
Boukadida, Jalel
Stoiber, Heribert
author_sort Brini, Ines
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The human Adenovirus (HAdV) is a common agent of acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Its clinical impact in immunocompetent children and in the context of coinfections remains unclear in Tunisia. MATERIAL AND METHODS: HAdV‐ARIs were studied in hospitalized patients from birth to the age of 5 years from 2013 to 2014. Clinical and demographic characteristics, coinfections, and molecular characterization of HAdV were established. RESULTS: HAdV‐positivity was detected in 114/583 specimens (19.6%) including 6.1% single infections and 93.9% coinfections. Adenoviral coinfections mostly comprised human Rhinovirus (50.9%), Streptococcus pneumoniae (34.2%), human Respiratory Syncytial virus A/B (29.8%), and human Coronaviruses (21.9%). HAdV infection was predominant in the pediatric population (25.0% vs 10.0% in neonates, P < .001) and peaked in February 2014 (21.1%). HAdV severity of pediatric cases is characterized by low saturation of oxygen (<94%, 33.8%, P = .05) and long duration of oxygen support (≥5 days, 32.7%, P = .02). Severe HAdV infections were described with S. pneumoniae coinfection, which seemed to increase the risk of death. HAdV genotyping identified HAdV‐C as the most common species. Severe ARIs were observed in all HAdV‐identified types. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that sequences were variable suggesting the circulation of different HAdV strains sharing more similarities to strains circulating in Europe or Asia than those from Africa. CONCLUSION: This first molecular study of HAdV in Tunisia demonstrated that it has an important role in severe ARIs with HAdV‐C being the most common species. S. pneumoniae codetection seems to increase the severity of HAdV‐ARIs.
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spelling pubmed-76897152020-12-08 Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia Brini, Ines Guerrero, Aida Ezzine, Issaad‐Kawther Orth‐Höller, Dorothea Hetzer, Benjamin Würzner, Reinhard Hazgui, Olfa Handous, Imene Nouri‐Merchaoui, Sonia Bouguila, Jihene Mahdhaoui, Nabiha Boughamoura, Lamia Malekshahi, Zahra von‐Laer, Dorothee Hannachi, Naila Boukadida, Jalel Stoiber, Heribert J Med Virol Research Articles BACKGROUND: The human Adenovirus (HAdV) is a common agent of acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Its clinical impact in immunocompetent children and in the context of coinfections remains unclear in Tunisia. MATERIAL AND METHODS: HAdV‐ARIs were studied in hospitalized patients from birth to the age of 5 years from 2013 to 2014. Clinical and demographic characteristics, coinfections, and molecular characterization of HAdV were established. RESULTS: HAdV‐positivity was detected in 114/583 specimens (19.6%) including 6.1% single infections and 93.9% coinfections. Adenoviral coinfections mostly comprised human Rhinovirus (50.9%), Streptococcus pneumoniae (34.2%), human Respiratory Syncytial virus A/B (29.8%), and human Coronaviruses (21.9%). HAdV infection was predominant in the pediatric population (25.0% vs 10.0% in neonates, P < .001) and peaked in February 2014 (21.1%). HAdV severity of pediatric cases is characterized by low saturation of oxygen (<94%, 33.8%, P = .05) and long duration of oxygen support (≥5 days, 32.7%, P = .02). Severe HAdV infections were described with S. pneumoniae coinfection, which seemed to increase the risk of death. HAdV genotyping identified HAdV‐C as the most common species. Severe ARIs were observed in all HAdV‐identified types. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that sequences were variable suggesting the circulation of different HAdV strains sharing more similarities to strains circulating in Europe or Asia than those from Africa. CONCLUSION: This first molecular study of HAdV in Tunisia demonstrated that it has an important role in severe ARIs with HAdV‐C being the most common species. S. pneumoniae codetection seems to increase the severity of HAdV‐ARIs. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-08-13 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7689715/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.26375 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Medical Virology Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Brini, Ines
Guerrero, Aida
Ezzine, Issaad‐Kawther
Orth‐Höller, Dorothea
Hetzer, Benjamin
Würzner, Reinhard
Hazgui, Olfa
Handous, Imene
Nouri‐Merchaoui, Sonia
Bouguila, Jihene
Mahdhaoui, Nabiha
Boughamoura, Lamia
Malekshahi, Zahra
von‐Laer, Dorothee
Hannachi, Naila
Boukadida, Jalel
Stoiber, Heribert
Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title_full Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title_fullStr Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title_short Human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the Sousse area of Tunisia
title_sort human adenoviruses associated with respiratory illness in neonates, infants, and children in the sousse area of tunisia
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7689715/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.26375
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